ISSF World Championship: USA dominates skeet events, India’s Bhavtegh and Raiza miss finals
Team USA claimed all four skeet gold medals at the ISSF World Championship 2025 in Athens. Indian shooters Bhavtegh Singh Gill and Raiza Dhillon missed out on finals qualification, with India finishing eighth in the women’s team event
Published Date - 12 October 2025, 09:33 PM
Hyderabad: Bhavtegh Singh Gill and Olympian Raiza Dhillon missed out on final qualification as the skeet events at the ISSF World Championship Shotgun 2025 concluded at the Malakasa Shooting Range in Athens, Greece, on Sunday.
The day belonged to the United States, as World No.1 Samantha Simonton and four-time Olympic champion Vincent Hancock claimed the women’s and men’s skeet world championship titles respectively, leading to a remarkable clean sweep of all four skeet gold medals for Team USA, with the men’s and women’s team golds also going to them.
In the women’s skeet final, Simonton shot 57 to take gold ahead of Mexico’s Gabriela Rodriguez, who secured silver with 54 hits, while Sweden’s Victoria Larsson clinched bronze with 44 hits. Earlier in qualification, Simonton had topped the field with 122 hits, followed by Rodriguez on 120 (+8 in shoot-off), and Larsson, who claimed the sixth and final qualification spot with 119 (+3), edging out veteran Kimberly Rhode and Slovakia’s Vanesa Hockova.
Among the Indians, Raiza Dhillon finished 16th with a total of 116 hits (23, 22, 24, 22, 25), while Parinaaz Dhaliwal (21, 23, 22, 21, 23) and Ganemat Sekhon (21, 22, 24, 21, 22) finished 44th and 47th respectively with 110 hits each.
In the women’s team event, the American trio of Samantha Simonton, Kimberly Rhode, and Dania Jo Vizzi (15th individually) clinched gold with a combined score of 358. Cyprus (349) took silver, Slovakia (348) secured bronze, and India finished eighth with 336.
In the men’s competition, Vincent Hancock shot 59 in the final to claim his fifth individual World Championship gold. Czechia’s Daniel Korcak won silver with 55, while Denmark’s Emil Kjeldgaard Petersen took bronze with 45. Hancock had earlier topped qualification with 124 out of 125 hits.
India’s Bhavtegh Singh Gill shot 22 in his final round to finish 38th with 119 hits (25, 25, 24, 23, 22). Olympian Mairaj Ahmad Khan and Asian champion Anantjeet Singh Naruka both ended their campaigns strongly with perfect 25s in the final round, finishing 53rd and 83rd respectively with totals of 117 (24, 21, 25, 22, 25) and 115 (24, 24, 20, 22, 25).
Team USA also claimed men’s team gold with 365 hits, followed by Italy (363) and hosts Greece (361). India placed 16th with a combined score of 351.